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Variation of local surface properties of an air bubble in water caused by its interaction with another surface

Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:53
Version 1 2016-10-13, 09:11
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:53 authored by LA Del Castillo, S Ohnishi, SL Carnie, RG Horn
Surface and hydrodynamic forces acting between an air bubble and a flat mica surface in surfactant-free water and in 1 mM KCl solution have been investigated by observing film drainage using a modified surface force apparatus (SFA). The bubble shapes observed with the SFA are compared to theoretical profiles computed from a model that considers hydrodynamic interactions, surface curvature, and disjoining pressure arising from electrical double layer and van der Waals interactions. It is shown that the bubble experiences double-layer forces, and a final equilibrium wetting film between the bubble and mica surfaces is formed by van der Waals repulsion. However, comparison with the theoretical model reveals that the double-layer forces are not simply a function of surface separation. Rather, they appear to be changed by one of more of the following: the bubble's dynamic deformation, its proximity to another surface, and/or hydrodynamic flow in the aqueous film that separate them. The same comments apply to the hydrodynamic mobility or immobility of the air-water interface. Together the results show that the bubble's surface is "soft" in two senses: in addition to its well-known deformability, its local properties are affected by weak external forces, in this case the electrical double-layer interactions with a nearby surface and hydrodynamic flow in the neighboring aqueous phase.

History

Journal

Langmuir

Volume

32

Pagination

7671-7682

Location

Washington, D.C.

eISSN

1520-5827

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, American Chemical Society

Issue

30

Publisher

American Chemical Society

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